Thames & Co. v. Rembert's Adm'r

63 Ala. 561
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 63 Ala. 561 (Thames & Co. v. Rembert's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thames & Co. v. Rembert's Adm'r, 63 Ala. 561 (Ala. 1879).

Opinion

BBICKELL, C. J.

The bill was filed by the appellee, a judgment creditor of D. Brooks Jackson, to vacate a conveyance of lands and personal property, dated March 8th, 1869, made by said Jackson to Lucius Kelly, because it was intended to delay, hinder, and defraud the creditors of the grantor. The deed is of bargain and sale, reciting, as its consideration, the payment in money by Kelly to Jackson, of the sum of forty-two hundred dollars, and his sis several obligations for the payment, by the first day of January, 1870, and each successive year until and including the first day of January, 1875, of forty-four bales of cotton, weighing in the aggregate twenty-two thousand pounds, at twenty cents per pound. Jackson and Kelly were originally tbe only defendants to the bill; and they, after having demurred, made no further defense, but suffered the original and amended bills to be taken as confessed. Mrs. Priscilla E. Jackson, the wife of the grantor, C. E. Thames & Co., and the Planters’ and Merchants’ Insurance Company, were brought in by an amended bill, upon the allegation that they claimed some interest, the value of which was unknown, in the property covered by the deed.

As errors are assigned only by Thames & Co., and the P. and M. Insurance Company, it is not necessary to refer, for an understanding of the questions to be decided, to any other of the pleadings than their answer. They deny that the conveyance to Kelly, made by Jackson, was intended to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the latter; and insist that it was made in good faith, upon an adequate and valuable consideration. However this may be, they aver that they stand as bona fide purchasers from Kelly, without notice of any fraud infecting the conveyance' to him, which is fair and valid upon its face, and have an equity superior to that of' the appellee as a judgment creditor of Jackson. The case thus resolves itself into two inquiries: 1st, whether [566]*566the conveyance from Jackson to Kelly is fraudulent as to the creditors of the former; 2d, if it be fraudulent, whether Thames & Co., and the P. and M. Insurance Company, are entitled to protection as bona fide purchasers from Kelly.

1. The chancellor seems to have been of the opinion, that, on its face, the conveyance to Kelly was fraudulent and void as to the creditors of Jackson. If that was true, it would be decisive of the case in all its aspects; for, of all that appears upon the face of that conveyance, to those subsequently dealing with Kelly, and acquiring rights which must be traced to it, notice must be imputed conclusively. A purchaser has the right, and it is his duty, to examine every instrument forming a link in the chain of title; and of such instruments, the presumption is, that he has knowledge; because he has the means of acquiring it, and if he does not acquire it, his own negligence is the cause of his ignorance, and it is not the negligent the law favors.

But, it is an error to suppose the conveyance is, on its face, fraudulent as to the creditors of the grantor. In form, consideration and covenant, it is an ■ ordinary deed of bargain and sale; not disclosing that the grantor was embarrassed by debt, or that there was any incapacity of entering into the bargain resting on the grantee, or that any other relation than that of which it is evidence, vendor and vendee, existed between the parties. Whatever of suspicion may cloud it— whatever may be the evidence of fraud it was intended to consummate, depends upon extrinsic evidence. It does not require any extended discussion of that evidence to satisfy the mind that, though the chancellor was in error, in pronouncing the conveyance fraudulent on its face, he was not in error in his conclusion, that the evidence showed satisfactorily that it was not bona fide, but colorable — intended and used to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the grantor.

2. We do not inquire, whether Kelly and Jackson have fairly explained the causes which induced them to suffer the bills to be taken as confessed; nor whether, if they alone were interested in the result of the suit, they could lessen or qualify the effect of the decree, by any evidence, or explanation whatever. Before the filing of the bill, and, of consequence, before the rendition of the decree, the mortgages they had executed to Thames & Co., and the assignment of the latter to the P. and M. Insurance Company, were operative. There was no identity, or community of interest; no combination, or collusion, shown or averred, which would render them subject to be affected by the admissions or the laches of Kelly and Jackson. If the latter had answered, admit[567]*567ting all the allegations of fraud, and every matter of fact essential to the appellee’s right of recovery, the answer could not have been read as evidence against their co-defendants. The' decree pro confesso is no more than the admission of record by them, as such an answer would have been, of the truth of the allegations of the bill; and while binding and conclusive upon them, is not evidence against their co-defendants. — Julian v. Reynolds, 8 Ala. 680. It must, therefore, be conceded that, as against the appellants, the fraud in the conveyance to Kelly must be proved as averred, and as fully proved as if Kelly and Jackson had entered into the litigation, denying the fraud, and insisting upon the validity of the conveyance.

8. It must also be conceded to the appellants, that the burden of proof rests upon the appellee. It is a general, if not a universal rule, that a plaintiff in an action at law, or a complainant in a suit in equity, assumes the burden of proving every ■ affirmative fact, essential to his right of recovery. No material fact is presumed; and the rule is general, in courts of law and of equity, that a party relying upon fraud, must aver it with certainty, and must prove it as. averred. It is often said, the law never presumes fraud; and that it will not be imputed, when the facts and circumstances, from which it is supposed to arise, may reasonably consist with pure intentions. This is certainly true, -when no confidential relation exists between the parties, subjecting the one to the influence and control of the other, and disadvantageous bargains or contracts have been made, by which the one in whom confidence is reposed derives profit, and the other sustains detriment. But, it must not be supposed that fraud must be proved by direct and positive- evidence, and is incapable of proof by circumstances leading to a well-grounded, rational belief of its existence. There is no fact which may be the subject of controversy in a judicial proceeding, civil or criminal, that is not the subject of proof by circumstantial, as distinguished from positive or direct evidence.

Where a fraud is contemplated and committed upon creditors, concealment of it is the first, and generally the most persistent, effort of those who are engaged in it. Publicity would render their acts vain and useless. Leaving direct and positive evidence, accessible to those injured by it, would be the equivalent of a confession of the culpable intent, and of the defeasible character of the transaction. There are numerous circumstances, so frequently attending sales, conveyances and transfers, intended to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors, that they are known and denominated badges of fraud. They [568]*568do not constitute — are not elements of fraud, but merely circumstances from which it may be inferred.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Ala. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thames-co-v-remberts-admr-ala-1879.